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Amazing man with many dreams but one true goal for life!

That's how I feel.

How Bishop Sheen Brought Catholicism to the Country

Excellent introductory guide

Better off with a real book
Amazing product, easy to install
3d studio viz3 and max3 training cd

A good start to enter 3D Max world.My old commentary:
With practic examples and tutorials since the beggining, it teaches in a easy way.
Good for Intermediate and begginers.Go to #3dsmax at Undernet if you need help.
wonderful!!

Not even worth the 1 star rating!!!My only return in a sea of books and CD's. You figure out how
bad it must be! Even the interface does not work, I very much doubt this work is done by a computer science educated programmer. Don't ask me the studio max content, it is so elementary you will be shocked. Check out a freebie internet exercise instead such as the soccerball which will familiarize you with enough max interface.
Good TutorialThe only problem (and it exists with all books of this type), is that the tutorials are parts of projects which you have to repeat many times to master the technique of that chapter. The only way that you'll will be totally motivated is to create your own building, and most likely it involes an element that is not covered, so you are on your own. Nothing truly replaces taking a class, but this is definately cheeper!
Great Training!really liked it. So I bought this product too. Its
just as good if not better.
Most authors seem to think its enough just to rewrite
the manuals. This one actually provides training
on a CD. You follow the steps, you learn the software.
By the time you've done half the tutorials on this
CD you can do your own projects.
Also, there are links on the CD that let you email the
author. Following the steps on the MAX 4 CD, I ran into
trouble. I mailed the author. She wrote back to provide
me with help!
What I love about Amazon is that you can buy products
you would never hear about otherwise. This is a great
training CD. I highly recommend it.


Go Back To TVThe author's constant use of exclamation points was very amateur. The dialogue between characters was contrived and asinine. The characters themselves were completely undeveloped, with only the slightest description of them physically. I was uanble to form a picture of *any* of these characters in my mind, as I usually am when reading a novel.
As I said, the storyline had some potential...had it been better developed. I mean, what 18 year old from "the midwest" (since when is Virginia in the midwest?) gets a couple of hundred bucks from her widowed father, hops on a plane to NYC, checks into her conveniently-arranged Village sublet and within weeks is suddenly the star of a television soap opera? What widowed father readily hands over money to his wimpy teenage daughter (and yes, this character is a wimp) and sends her off alone to NYC to break into show business? Why does Jade take such an instant dislike to Amanda? Why does Monique treat her like a daughter? Why does a guy who fights with her on the plane trip to NYC fall in love with her almost immediately the day he meets up with her at the show? Why has her ex-fiancee stayed around for months while she makes her decision? These are just a few of the things the author really should've developed if she wanted to put out an even halfway decent novel.
Appallingly Boring!
Sensational Summer Fun: A Great Page Tuner!

AVOID THIS CD ~~ Serious Programmers BewareWhat a letdown! Her examples and exercises are so elementary I started thinking the books I had bought are much better. Please don't be fooled by the pretty picture on the jacket cover of this CD, it is just horrible. You would not believe that somebody is making money off of this CD. It has very klunky interface, using an Internet browser. The examples are elementary school crude and simple. There is NO WAY you are gonna start modeling faces, or even house interiors using this CD. It doesn't even teach you properly how to implement the MAX UI which as we all know can be intimadating to a newbie. You can't really become a MAX user simply by learning how to create a circle or sphere. The trick is how to turn that sphere into European soccerball with hexagons, leather creases, diamond blacks on it, and then go set it on a grassy field (with real MAX blades of grass) and a goal with netting and a sky in the background. That's what Max'ing is about and this CD only teaches you how to create a circle. I'm sure many of us who have access to this software are intelligent enough to a a circle on our own, right? We dont need to shell out [the money] to be told how to do a sphere, or a box.
You are an absolute beginner and want to familiarize yourself with Max interface in a fast, easy...way, buy the book from the QuickStart Guide. This CD at [the price] doesn't do anything more than that[less expensive] book. In fact I find flipping through the examples of the QuickSTart Guides much easier than trying to get this CD to work.
Overpriced, written by a person who is obviously not an expert on Studio Max or programming, I rate this CD *** 0 *** stars!
We used this CD in Classs
Amazing Book!

An incomplete "complete guide"
If you love SF, especially TV SF, you will enjoy this book.While I really like the book and think it is a must for any serious fan of SF, there are, alas, a few shortcomings--but only a few. For one, it does not contain an entry for BORIS KARLOFF'S THRILLER, which is surprising not only because the show is an American classic, but also because the show itself is currently broadcast on the very network that is sanctioning this book. Also, fans of certain less-popular but relatively recent shows may be disappointed to find that the entry for those shows do not include an episode guide (e.g., THE FLASH or THE ADVENTURES OF BRISCO COUNTY, JR.). I must also mention that there are a few mistakes in the book's Table of Contents, but this is only a minor annoyance and is easy to surmount.
In short, if you love SF, especially Television SF, you will enjoy this book.
One of my favorite reference worksFor the main series profiled, the authors provide an introductory article as well as a complete episode guide. For each episode, they give a plot summary, as well as writing, directing, and guest-starring credits.
Not all the series are given such detailed attention; some only have the episode titles listed, and some don't even get that. In general, shows that get less comprehensive attention are shows that are primarily thought of as representatives of another genre: "Bewitched" (sitcom), "The Six Million Dollar Man" (action/adventure), etc.
Despite its sometimes incomplete nature, this is a wonderfully informative and entertaining book. Sci-fi staples and cult favorites are well represented: "Babylon 5," "Blake's 7," "Quantum Leap," "Star Trek" and its various sequels, "The X-Files," etc. I particularly liked the ample attention given to short-lived shows that were nonetheless loved by devoted circles of viewers.
Of course, a book of this nature is generally out of date by the time it hits the bookshelves, so I am already anticipating a new edition. But until then, this book remains in an honored position in my library.